In Re Estate of Brooks

294 N.W. 735, 229 Iowa 485
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 19, 1940
DocketNo. 45342.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 294 N.W. 735 (In Re Estate of Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Brooks, 294 N.W. 735, 229 Iowa 485 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The decedent, Stephen W. Brooks, died May 2, 1939, at Clarion, Iowa, leaving surviving him his widow, Ella Brooks, and as heirs at law four daughters and four children of a deceased daughter. All of said daughters were children by a prior marriage. The decedent and Ella Brooks had no children as a result of their marriage.

Ella Brooks and S. W. Brooks were married at Clarion on *487 December 7, 1935. S. W. Brooks then owned a quarter section of land in Wright county, clear of encumbrance, and personal property consisting of cash, farm equipment and livestock.

On January 15, 1936, S. W. Brooks executed the purported will. Provision was made for the payment of debts. Five dollars each was bequeathed to three of his daughters and to three of his grandchildren. Ella Brooks was devised and bequeathed a life estate in all of his property with remainder in fee to the fourth daughter and fourth grandchild. Ella Brooks was designated executrix to serve without bond. In the event of contest of the will, each contestant was to forfeit her bequest and all rights to any part of the estate. The interest of such contestant was bequeathed to such residuary devisee who should not contest the will.

S. W. Brooks and Ella Brooks lived on the farm with a grandson of Brooks, one of the residuary devisees under the will. On March 3, 1937, they had a sale of much of the personal property on the farm and in October 1937 had a closing out sale of the balance of it. On July 28, 1937, S. W. Brooks purchased a home in Clarion. The contract was made in the name of S. W. Brooks and Ella Brooks, the consideration was paid by S. W. Brooks, but title was taken in the name of Ella Brooks alone. They moved into this home in town in October 1937, and resided there for the balance of S. W. Brooks’ lifetime.

The farm was sold for $22,000, the sale being completed March 29, 1938. The consideration consisted of $1,000 cash, transfer of an 80-acre farm valued at $8,000 and a mortgage back on the farm for $13,000. The mortgage named Ella Brooks as the sole mortgagee.

The three daughters of decedent, other than the residuary devisee, contested the probate of the will on the ground that its execution was procured through coercion and undue influence on the part of Ella Brooks, proponent thereof. All four daughters were plaintiffs in an action in equity wherein they sought to reform the deed to the home in Clarion and the $13,000 mortgage on the 160-acre farm and have the name of S. W. Brooks substituted for Ella Brooks in each instrument, asserting that the execution of said instruments to Ella Brooks as sole grantee and *488 mortgagee was the result of fraud, deceit, duress, coercion and undue influence on the part of Ella Brooks. Plaintiffs also sought an accounting for the income from such property subsequent to decedent’s death and a partition of the property.

By agreement of the parties, the court entered an order consolidating the causes and providing that they be tried together as an equitable action. Trial was had. The court entered a decree which denied probate of the purported will, reformed the deed to the home in Clarion and the mortgage on the 160 acres by substituting the name of Stephen W. Brooks for that of Ella Brooks as grantee and mortgagee, ordered an accounting by Ella Brooks to the administrator of the estate of Stephen W. Brooks for the income from property belonging to the estate, ordered partition of the property but continued the partition proceedings pending settlement of the estate. Ella Brooks, proponent and defendant, has appealed. The causes have been consolidated for submission in this, court.

While many legal propositions are argued by both sides herein, the principal contention of appellant is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the findings of fact upon which the trial court based its decision herein. The evidence of appellees is primarily circumstantial. This, of course, is not unusual in this type of litigation. Before undertaking to dispose of the propositions presented by appellant, we deem it advisable to briefly review the evidence relied upon by appellees, which persuaded the court to decide the controversy in their favor.

At the time of his death, Stephen W. Brooks was about' 70 years of age. His first wife died about 1932. They were then residing upon the 160-acre farm. Following her death, Brooks continued to reside upon the farm with his grandson, William Clyde Brooks, and a daughter, Florence Brooks. Florence did the housework until about December 1934, at which time she was adjudged insane and was taken to Cherokee where she later died. Brooks and his grandson continued on the farm, keeping house and operating the farm. During the fall of 1935, Brooks became acquainted with appellant, who was then Ella Stone, a widow, 57 years of age. She had been twice married, her first marriage at the age of 21 resulting in a divoree ten years later, in 1910. In 1918 she married Mr. Stone. He died *489 in 1932. After his death, she lived with a daughter by her first marriage, in Tulsa. She worked part of the time there as a housekeeper. She then moved to Appanoose county, Iowa, and lived with her mother. She then moved to Des Moines where she stayed in the home of an únele for a time, and then did housekeeping. She advertised in a Des Moines paper for a position as housekeeper. Among the answers was a response from the decedent. Her acquaintance with Stephen W. Brooks was the result of his response to her advertisement.

Appellant and decedent were married at the Methodist parsonage in Clarion by Rev. J. C. Buthman on December 7, 1935. After the marriage ceremony, they went to the farm where she met for the first time some of decedent’s children and grandchildren. None of the appellees herein knew or had heard of appellant until after the ceremony had been performed.

Appellant and decedent continued to reside on the farm until October 1937. The land was farmed by decedent and his grandson during the season of 1936. The grandson left the home and the land was leased to a Mr. Pletcher in 1937.

The farm sale held in March 1937 was arranged by appellant. Appellant negotiated with Ed. O. Turk for the purchase of the home in Clarion. Both she and decedent looked at it, but appellant attended to the details. The contract was made in the name of decedent and appellant, but the deed was made out to appellant alone, at her request in the absence of decedent. The initial payment was made from the proceeds of the sale in March and the balance of the purchase price was paid from the sale in October.

On January 3,1937, appellant and decedent opened a joint banking account, which was continued until December 20,1938, on which date appellant wrote a check for the balance of the account and deposited it in her personal account. The bank statements for the joint account show a large number of checks. Only five of these appear to have been drawn by decedent and they were for relatively small amounts. . .

After appellant went to live on the farm, she was active in the management- of the business on the farm. She directed work in the fields, looked after selling of hogs and corn, and hauling to-market, sold grain at the elevator, assumed author *490

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Bluebook (online)
294 N.W. 735, 229 Iowa 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-brooks-iowa-1940.